4.5 stars rounded up
I don’t uniformly round up my stars, but in Coast Road, I am compelled, by a turn of phrase, or the fate of a character, or a bit of both. The story came toward me as it held itself back. I often felt there was a subtext underneath the sentences as they revealed themselves. The story toggles between two couples, a priest, and a woman who left her family, in the mid-1990s Ireland, before divorce was legal. It’s a cruel lifestyle if couples can’t end a painful marriage rather than live in an ongoing struggle with each other. How far would you go to let go? Author Alan Murrin explores the harsh boundaries placed on women who are subsumed by the system, as well as the significance of friendships. It’s a quiet book about the restive lives of women in difficult marriages.
This is small town Ireland in Donegal County (nicknamed “Ireland’s Forgotten County”), where everyone knows everyone’s business. Colette Crowley, a published poet, had previously left her husband, Shaun, to go live with a man in Dublin. It blew up in her face, and now she is back, but Shaun won’t allow her to see their children. Near the opening of the book, Colette is inquiring about the cottage house owned by Donal Mullen and his ever-pregnant wife, Delores (three children and another baby due). (Donal is a terrible husband in a smorgasbord of ways.) It’s on a hill flanking the Mullen’s land, and can be rented out in summer for three times the price they can get now, in winter. They agree to rent it to Colette for these off-months.
Colette is tall, radiant with her grand posture, swivel-ly, shiny hair, strong jaw and creamy skin. She drinks too much and lives a lonely life. Moreover, she sure makes some unfortunate choices, almost like an adolescent. She also offers a writing class to pay her bills. Izzy Keveany signs up, takes pleasure in the assignments and begins a deeper friendship with Colette. In the meantime, Izzy’s friendship with Father Brian creates ugly gossip and rumors across the town. Her marriage isn’t great shakes, either.
Liftoff is gradual in the novel, and initially there’s more interior drama than physical action. You’ll know when a crisis is underway, you’ll feel a tight thread winding around the story, and the characters headed for trouble. I can still point to a place that could potentially call for a sequel. I don’t actually think it was resolved in the end—I mean, in finding a perpetrator for a certain act, it seems they deployed very little energy in coming to a conclusion. Anyway, there is a climax--a denouement, and then the finale. But I have other thoughts about what the author decided.
This is a meditative story, a thoughtful and thought-provoking narrative that covers marriage, motherhood, friendship, betrayal, small town antics, and the artist’s life. Be patient, it’s more a journey than a destination.